STEM in Early Childhood Education
STEM in Early Childhood Education
2018, 3(3), 06
ISSN: 2468-4368
EDITORIAL
STEM in Early Childhood Education
Hanno van Keulen 1*
Citation: van Keulen, H. (2018). STEM in Early Childhood Education. European Jourrnal of STEM Education,
3(3), 06. https://doi.org/10.20897/ejsteme/3866
This special issue of the European Journal of STEM Education is dedicated to STEM in early childhood education.
Early childhood education with respect to STEM already starts in the womb, when the not-yet-born baby
accustoms itself to the material world surrounding it (Smith and Gasser, 2005). Certain sounds become familiar
and newborns can already discriminate their mother tongue from other languages. After birth, the force of gravity
imposes itself on the child, forcing it down. This is the start of a yearlong struggle to rise, which becomes the
source of many metaphors we all use to make sense of our lives. When things do not go our way, we feel down
and depressed. When we succeed, we lift our hearts and enjoy high spirits. Consequently, teaching children the
meaning of ‘up’ and ‘down’ is much easier than teaching them ‘left’ and ‘right’, as any parent and Kindergarten
teacher will know. ‘Up’ and ‘down’ are extremely meaningful and important to the child, whereas ‘left’ and ‘right’
are often quite arbitrary. Since we are subjected to gravity, we need flat feet and strong legs to cope with that force.
We would notice it immediately when someone stands on its head and hands. But do you know which hand your
colleague uses to pick up that cup of coffee?
Children perceive and act before they can speak or think consciously. Experiences in and with the material
world are the starting point of cognitive development. STEM in early childhood education is not explaining
children the laws of gravity; it is guiding them to and through experiences in which gravity plays a decisive role. Or
any other concept that is important to children’s lives. Children are not yet interested in correct reproductions of
true statements about the world. They first of all want to know what the things in the world afford them to do
(Gibson and Pick, 2000). Can you eat it? Is it safe? The motor system will children help to act, and the sensory
system will help them to correlate objects and phenomena in the world to their experiences. STEM in early
childhood education is about rich material environments that children can explore. It is also about helping them
with conceptual development, by drawing their attention to salient features and by suggesting words for ‘this’ and
‘that’. Conceptual development starts with experiences that impose themselves upon the child and crave for
attention and interpretation. Some things make sounds, some things flow, some things can be put in other things.
The development of verbal language skills and vocabulary cannot do without this process, and the development
of scientific concepts cannot do without the metaphorical use of words like ‘up’, ‘in’ or ‘current’ (Lakoff and
Johnson, 1980; Browne, 2003).
Words do not just come from personal, individual experience. They are suggested to the child from the social
community in which it grows up. High quality interaction with adults, or older children, is as important for
understanding the world and for healthy development as having the rich material experiences themselves. Learning
about the material world is learning to play, is learning a language, is learning social skills, is learning to
communicate (Van Oers, 2013; Vygotsky and Luria, 1994).
Learning about the material world of course is also learning about STEM. STEM is about questions that can
be explored scientifically; or about technological problems that can be solved through engineering and design.
These questions and problems will take on sophisticated, often mathematical expressions in adult and professional
life. They will build on previous experiences and conceptualizations. But when you unwrap all these layers of
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van Keulen / STEM in Early Childhood Education
conceptions and technology that uses other technology (Arthur, 2009), you will see that the laser pointer you use
in your lectures is just your finger, but improved. Your cell phone is just your voice, but improved, so that it carries
your voice over distance. Technology is an embodied answer to our embodied problems and that is why we have,
or should have, an intuitive understanding of technology.
Alas, many people seem to become alienated from the material and technological world when they grow up
(ASPIRES, 2013). In many countries, too few young people aspire for a career in science or engineering. Something
goes wrong and schools seem to play a part in this. Instead of stimulating children to plunge headlong in the
material world and start making sense of it, many teachers fear the openness and lack the pedagogical repertoire
to guide children from experience to insight. Explorations quickly become messy and unpredictable, and children
can ask questions that are difficult to answer. So instead of relying on the power of children’s direct experiences
of phenomena, too many teachers rely on mediators like textbooks and paper and pencil exercises or refrain from
teaching STEM at all. It is okay when children play in the sandbox in their own time, but this is not ‘real learning’.
And yes, when they are sixteen, children may know that water is H2O, that a whale is a mammal and jeans are
made of cotton, but many will have lost contact with the processes that lead to this knowledge and to these
products, and they do not know both the joy and the frustration that comes with investigating, designing, making,
modeling, testing, improving and explaining.
So, it is vital to start teaching STEM at an early age and teach it well. Good teaching should be evidence based,
or at least evidence informed. That is why research is important. And research on STEM in early childhood
education can be quite divers, as is exemplified by the contributions to this special issue.
In the first contribution, John, Sibuma, Wunnava, Dubosarsky and Anggoro propose a problem-based curriculum
for three- to five-year old children, with an explicit focus on engineering problems. They find that this affects
engagement of the children but also the self-efficacy of the teachers.
Bers writes about ScratchJr, a tool with which children who cannot yet read or write can create programs.
Certainly digital technology is of great relevance in the present and future life of young children, and it is important
to give coding and computational thinking its proper place in educational settings.
Strawhacker and Bers focus on another big hype, the Maker Movement. They investigated a Kindergarten
classroom that contributes to the children’s technological development and found that Makerspace activities
definitely have potential but that teachers’ interaction with children matters too.
Engineering design problems are introduced in Kindergarten by Tank, Rynearson and Moore to investigate
whether young children can engage in the stages of engineering design processes and learn to use engineering
language.
Malone, Tiarani, Irving, Kajfez, Lin, Giasi and Edmiston bring engineering design challenges to Kindergarten,
incorporated in drama, dance, visual arts and physical education. They investigated the effects on the understanding
of what engineers do and of technology and found significant increases.
Ralph and Petrina focus on social learning with mobile devices, gathering data by using cameras worn by
participants. They show that it is at least possible (if not guaranteed) to induce more prosocial sharing behaviors
in children aged 3-4 when interacting with mobile devices.
Scientific reasoning is considered by many to be difficult. Van der Graaf, Segers and Verhoeven investigate the
experimentation ability of Kindergarten children with learning problems.
Many children are anxious about mathematics. Furner investigates the mediating role of using children’s books
and children’s literature in math lessons on developing mathematically confident young people, feeling that as
children are less anxious, their performance may improve.
Stylianidou and co-workers, among them the late Anna Craft, reflect on the results of the 2011-2014 Creative
Little Scientists project and provide recommendations to foster inquiry and creativity in early years STEM
education.
Sumpter and Hedefalk analyze the strategies (‘epistomological moves’) teachers use to promote mathematical
reasoning in preschool. They find that teachers most often instruct, confirm or conclude, but that they hardly use
generative strategies that help children to produce arguments themselves and thus do not stimulate children to
learn creative mathematical reasoning.
STEM learning does not only take place at schools or in day care settings. For young children, the family is the
most important learning environment. Sheehan, Hightower, Lauricella and Wartella investigate whether parents’
attitudes on STEM and their acquaintance with STEM careers predict their children’s science and math skills, with
interesting findings.
DeJarnette wants to add the A of Arts to STEM, because both develop curiosity and creativity. She investigates
the effects of a professional development program on preschool teachers’ self-efficacy and disposition to
implement STEM.
Without the effort of the guest editors, Hannelie du Preez from Pretoria University in South Africa, Fani
Stylianidou from Ellinogermaniki Agogi in Greece and Estelle Blanchet from Bordeaux University in France and
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